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Vice President JD Vance and second lady Usha Vance announced on Tuesday they are expecting their fourth child.

The couple said the baby is a boy. 

‘Usha and the baby are doing well, and we are all looking forward to welcoming him in late July,’ the Vances wrote in a statement shared on social media.

‘During this exciting and hectic time, we are particularly grateful for the military doctors who take excellent care of our family and for the staff members who do so much to ensure that we can serve the country while enjoying a wonderful life with our children,’ they continued.

The White House retweeted the announcement, adding ‘The most pro-family administration in history! CONGRATULATIONS!’

Politicians including Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum and Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, also shared their congratulations via X.

‘Congratulations, @VP and @SLOTUS!’ Burgum wrote. ‘There is no greater joy than being a parent. Honored to work for an administration that puts family first!’

JD and Usha met at Yale University Law School and married in 2014.

Prior to her role as SLOTUS, Usha clerked for Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Brett Kavanaugh. 

She also worked as a litigator for the Munger, Tolles and Olson law firm until Vance was tapped as President Donald Trump’s running mate.

Their three children—Ewan, Vivek and Mirabel—have gone viral for appearances at the Inauguration Day swearing-in ceremony and the parade at Capital One Arena.

Breaking news. Check back for updates.

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A Danish lawmaker told President Donald Trump to ‘f— off’ during a recent heated debate at the European Parliament over the future of Greenland.

Footage shows European Parliament member Anders Vistisen unleashing the rebuke during a session focused on U.S. interest in Greenland and amid Trump’s drive to acquire the Arctic territory, according to reports.

The outburst came as Trump continued to float the idea of bringing Greenland under American control in a bid to bolster what he says is a national and global security necessity.

Addressing the European Union’s legislative body, Vistisen, 38, directly confronted Trump’s long-standing interest.

Vistisen said Greenland was not for sale before escalating his remarks in language that violated parliamentary rules. 

‘Let me put this in words you might understand: Mr. President, f— off,’ Vistisen added, drawing reactions from the chamber.

Parliament Vice President Nicolae Ștefănuță quickly intervened, admonishing the lawmaker for his language and warning of consequences.

‘I am sorry, colleague, this is against our rules,’ Ștefănuță said. 

‘We have clear rules about cuss words and language that is inappropriate in this room. I am sorry to interrupt you. It is unacceptable, even if you might have strong political feelings about this.’

Following the reprimand, Vistisen finished the remainder of his remarks in Danish before leaving the podium.

The incident comes as Trump has renewed public pressure on the issue of Greenland, a strategically located Arctic territory that belongs to Denmark and a NATO ally of the U.S.

Asked Monday in an NBC interview whether he would consider using force to take Greenland, Trump responded, ‘No comment.’

As previously reported by Fox News Digital, Trump continued to push the issue Jan. 19, revealing on Truth Social that he spoke with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and agreed to further discussions in Davos, Switzerland.

‘Greenland is imperative for national and world security,’ Trump wrote. ‘There can be no going back.’

Trump is also scheduled to speak Jan. 21 at the World Economic Forum in Davos, where the Greenland question is expected to loom large.

Meanwhile, the topic of Greenland has strained relations with U.S. allies, including Canada. 

Prime Minister Mark Carney has emphasized solidarity with Denmark, stating, ‘We are NATO partners with Denmark, and our obligations stand.’

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President Donald Trump fueled fresh uncertainty Tuesday, offering a terse ‘you’ll see’ when asked at the White House how far he would go to get Greenland.

Trump dismissed concerns that Greenlanders do not want to join the U.S. and that a move to seize the island would undermine the NATO alliance.

In recent weeks, Trump has zeroed in on Greenland, the world’s largest island and a strategic outpost in the Arctic.

The remote, semi-autonomous Danish territory, a NATO ally, hosts a key U.S. military base and occupies a strategic position in an Arctic region growing more competitive as melting ice opens new shipping lanes and access to critical resources. 

 

Trump has repeatedly framed Greenland as a national security necessity, arguing that Russia and China would gain ground in the region if the U.S. does not acquire it.

The latest revelation comes as Trump heads to the snow-capped city of Davos, Switzerland, where global leaders have flocked to attend the World Economic Forum. 

The issue of Greenland is likely to dominate the sidelines of the summit as European leaders grapple with Trump’s fresh threat to impose tariffs on countries opposing his Greenland plans.

The threat of additional tariffs comes as his administration awaits a Supreme Court ruling on whether some of the trade duties he imposed in 2025 were legal. 

European leaders suggested over the weekend that they would be willing to hit back with retaliatory measures worth up to $107.7 billion.

Trump first raised the idea of acquiring Greenland during his previous term, drawing swift pushback from Denmark and other European leaders, resistance he now appears willing to confront again.

Whether the Trump administration strikes a deal to take over Greenland remains unclear. But as ice melts and competition in the Arctic intensifies, the island’s strategic importance is only likely to grow.

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The Trump administration asked for redactions to a sweeping new Heritage Foundation report modeling a potential U.S.–China war over Taiwan, even though the analysis relied entirely on publicly available, unclassified data, according to the report’s authors.

The redacted report, TIDALWAVE, warns that the United States could reach a breaking point within weeks of a high‑intensity conflict with China — conclusions that the authors say prompted senior national security officials to seek redactions over concerns adversaries could exploit the findings or use them to identify U.S. and allied military vulnerabilities.

Those conclusions include warnings that U.S. forces would culminate far sooner than China, suffer catastrophic losses to aircraft and sustainment infrastructure in the Pacific, and still fail to prevent a global economic shock estimated at roughly $10 trillion, nearly a tenth of global GDP.

According to the report’s authors, the AI‑enabled model drew exclusively on open‑source government, academic, industry and commercial information. An unredacted version of the report was provided to authorized U.S. government recipients for internal use.

Unlike traditional tabletop war games, TIDALWAVE employs an AI‑enabled model that runs thousands of iterations, tracking how losses in platforms, munitions, and fuel compound over time and drive cascading operational failure early in the conflict.

According to a Heritage spokesperson, the report had been shown to ‘high-level national security officials’ who requested some of the specifics be crossed out in black ink before its release to the public. The report still details how quickly U.S. forces could reach a breaking point and why the conflict would carry global consequences.

‘Redactions were made at the request of the U.S. government to prevent disclosure of information that could reasonably enable an adversary to (1) re mediate or ‘close’ critical vulnerabilities that the United States and its allies could otherwise exploit, or (2) identify or exploit U.S. and allied vulnerabilities in ways that could degrade operational endurance, resilience, or deterrence,’ the report said. 

A Department of War spokesperson declined to comment on discussions surrounding TIDALWAVE’s publication, but added: ‘The Department of War does not endorse, validate, or adjudicate third-party analyses, nor do we engage publicly on hypothetical conflict modeling. As a general matter, we take seriously the protection of information that, if aggregated or contextualized, could have implications for operational security.’

The White House could not be reached for comment. 

The war is decided early

According to the report’s redacted findings, the U.S. would culminate in less than half the time required for the People’s Republic of China in a high-intensity conflict. Culmination is defined as the point at which a force becomes incapable of continuing operations due to the loss of platforms, ammunition and/or fuel.

The report is explicit that the first 30 days to 60 days of a U.S.-China war determine its long-term shape and outcome, as early losses in aircraft, ships, fuel throughput and munitions rapidly compound and cannot be recovered on operationally relevant timelines.

The report concludes that the U.S. is not equipped nor arrayed to protect and sustain the Joint Force in a conflict with China in the Indo-Pacific. Rapid platform attrition, brittle logistics, concentrated basing and insufficient industrial surge capacity combine to force an early operational breaking point for American forces.

Catastrophic losses in the Pacific

The report warns that U.S. reliance on a few large, concentrated forward bases — particularly in Japan and Guam — leaves American airpower dangerously exposed to Chinese missile forces. 

In multiple scenarios, up to 90% of U.S. and allied aircraft positioned at major forward bases are destroyed on the ground during the opening phase of the conflict, as runways, fuel depots, command facilities and parked aircraft are hit simultaneously.

Munitions collapse within days

The report finds that critical U.S. precision‑guided munitions — including long‑range anti‑ship missiles, air‑to‑air interceptors and missile‑defense systems — begin to be unavailable within five to seven days of major combat operations. Across most scenarios, those critical munitions are completely exhausted within 35 days to 40 days, leaving U.S. forces unable to sustain high‑tempo combat.

Fuel emerges as the most decisive vulnerability of all. The report makes a critical distinction: the U.S. does not run out of fuel in most scenarios — it loses the ability to move fuel under fire.

Chinese doctrine explicitly prioritizes attacks on logistics vessels, ports, pipelines and replenishment tankers. Even limited tanker losses, port disruptions or pipeline severance are sufficient to drive fuel throughput below survivable levels, forcing commanders to sharply curtail air and naval operations despite fuel remaining in aggregate stockpiles.

China endures far longer

By contrast, China is assessed as capable of sustaining high‑intensity combat operations for months longer under the modeled assumptions.

Chinese ammunition stockpiles of critical munitions begin to be depleted after approximately 20 days to 30 days of major combat operations. However, substitution effects extend China’s ability to sustain combat operations out to months — well beyond the point at which U.S. forces culminate, according to the report. 

A $10 trillion global shock

The consequences extend far beyond the battlefield.

The redacted report concludes the U.S. is highly unlikely to prevent massive global economic fallout once a Taiwan conflict begins. 

Disruption of shipping lanes, destruction of critical infrastructure and the collapse of Taiwan’s semiconductor production would trigger a global economic shock estimated at roughly $10 trillion, with enduring ripple effects across financial markets, manufacturing and global trade.

Wartime footing for rebuilding the industrial base 

The report comes amid years of concern over U.S. military readiness and industrial capacity, as China rapidly expands its naval forces and shipbuilding base.

The U.S. Navy operates a smaller fleet than planned, while American shipyards face workforce shortages, aging infrastructure and chronic delays — even as China, the world’s largest shipbuilder, continues to outpace the U.S. in producing new naval hulls.

War Secretary Pete Hegseth and other military leaders have vowed to put the Pentagon on a wartime footing for industrial capacity.

Deterrence at risk

Perhaps most alarming, TIDALWAVE warns that the scale of losses in the Indo‑Pacific would leave the U.S. unable to deter or respond effectively to a second major conflict elsewhere in the world. 

A war over Taiwan could open the door to follow‑on aggression by adversaries such as Russia, Iran or North Korea, fundamentally destabilizing the global security order.

The report is blunt in its assessment: existing Pentagon programs and congressional funding are too slow, too fragmented and too modest to address the scale of the challenge. In many cases, the timeline required to fix critical vulnerabilities exceeds the likely timeline to conflict.

The call to action

To avoid what the authors describe as a strategic defeat, the report urges Congress to immediately expand munitions stockpiles, strengthen fuel reserves and distribution infrastructure, harden and disperse forward bases, and accelerate sustainment and logistics reforms. Without rapid action, the authors warn, the U.S. risks entering a conflict it is structurally unprepared to fight or sustain.

With intelligence warnings mounting that China could move on Taiwan before the end of the decade, TIDALWAVE cautions that the window to correct these deficiencies may be closing faster than Washington is prepared to act.

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ROME — Italian fashion designer Valentino Garavani has died, his foundation said Monday.

Usually known only by his first name, Valentino was 93, and had retired in 2008.

Founder of the eponymous brand, Valentino scaled the heights of haute couture, created a business empire and introduced a new color to the fashion world, the ‘Valentino Red.’

‘Valentino Garavani passed away today at his Roman residence, surrounded by his loved ones,’ the foundation said on Instagram.

He will lie in state Wednesday and Thursday, while the funeral will take place in Rome on Friday, it added.

La Princesse Ira de Furstenberg et Valentino
Ira de Fürstenberg, president of Valentino Parfums, alongside Valentino Garavani in his perfume laboratory in 1978.Alain Dejean / Getty Images file

Valentino was ranked alongside Giorgio Armani and Karl Lagerfeld as the last of the great designers from an era before fashion became a global, highly commercial industry run as much by accountants and marketing executives as the couturiers.

Lagerfeld died in 2019, while Armani died in September.

Valentino was adored by generations of royals, first ladies and movie stars, from Jackie Kennedy Onassis to Julia Roberts and Queen Rania of Jordan, who swore the designer always made them look and feel their best.

“I know what women want,” he once remarked. “They want to be beautiful.”

Portrait Of Valentino
Italian fashion designer Valentino.Andrea Blanch / Getty Images file

Never one for edginess or statement dressing, Valentino made precious few fashion faux-pas throughout his nearly half-century-long career, which stretched from his early days in Rome in the 1960s through to his retirement in 2008.

His fail-safe designs made Valentino the king of the red carpet, the go-to man for A-listers’ awards ceremony needs.

His sumptuous gowns have graced countless Academy Awards, notably in 2001, when Roberts wore a vintage black and white column to accept her best actress statue. Cate Blanchett also wore Valentino — a one-shouldered number in butter-yellow silk — when she won the Oscar for best supporting actress in 2004.

Défilé Valentino, Haute-Couture, Automne-Hiver 1993/94
Valentino and a group of models in his designs during a fashion show in Paris in 1993.Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images file

Valentino was also behind the long-sleeved lace dress Jacqueline Kennedy wore for her wedding to Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis in 1968. Kennedy and Valentino were close friends for decades, and for a spell, the one-time U.S. first lady wore almost exclusively Valentino.

He was also close to Diana, Princess of Wales, who often donned his sumptuous gowns.

Beyond his signature orange-tinged shade of red, other Valentino trademarks included bows, ruffles, lace and embroidery; in short, feminine, flirty embellishments that added to the dresses’ beauty and hence to that of the wearers.

Perpetually tanned and always impeccably dressed, Valentino shared the lifestyle of his jet-set patrons. In addition to his 152-foot yacht and an art collection including works by Picasso and Miro, the couturier owned a 17th-century chateau near Paris with a garden said to boast more than a million roses.

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Hoosiers backup quarterback Alberto Mendoza will enter the transfer portal, according to multiple reports Tuesday, Jan. 20, one day after Indiana beat Miami 27-21 in the title game of the College Football Playoff to secure the first national championship in program history.

Mendoza is the younger brother of Hoosiers starting quarterback Fernando Mendoza, the 2025 Heisman Trophy winner and the presumed No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.

According to multiple reports, Alberto Mendoza has committed to play for Georgia Tech.

As a redshirt freshman this season, Alberto Mendoza appeared in nine games, often relieving his older brother late in lopsided wins. Across those games, he completed 18 of 24 passes for 286 yards, five touchdowns and one interception. He was a threat on the ground, too, rushing for 190 yards and a touchdown on 13 attempts.

Mendoza’s decision comes about two weeks after Indiana landed a commitment from TCU transfer quarterback Josh Hoover, one of the most sought-after players in the portal. Hoover set a school record with 3,949 passing yards in 2024 and followed that up with 3,472 yards and 29 touchdowns this past season.

Should he win the job, as is widely expected, Hoover would become the third transfer quarterback to start for Indiana since coach Curt Cignetti was hired after the 2023 season, joining Kurtis Rourke and Fernando Mendoza.

Alberto Mendoza was a three-star recruit in the 2024 class coming out of Christopher Columbus High School in Miami. He was rated by 247Sports’ composite rankings as the No. 84 quarterback in the class. After enrolling at Indiana in June 2024, he was joined by his older brother, who transferred in from Cal after the 2024 season and went on to become the Hoosiers’ first Heisman winner in program history.

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In the final postscript to Indiana’s championship season, the Hoosiers unsurprisingly finish No. 1 in the US LBM Coaches Poll Top 25 ranking. Indiana claims all 62 top votes after becoming the first team in the sport’s modern era to post a 16-0 record. Runner-up Miami (Fla.) concludes the season at No. 2 after its unpredictable run through the playoff.

Semifinalists Mississippi and Oregon claim the next two positions, with Ole Miss’s No. 3 finish constituting its highest ranking since Oct. 19, 2015. Georgia narrowly edges Ohio State for the No. 5 spot. Texas Tech, Texas A&M, Alabama and Oklahoma round out the top 10.

TOP 25: The final US LBM Coaches Poll of the 2025 season

No. 11 Notre Dame heads the group of non-playoff invitees after opting out of the bowl season. No. 12 Brigham Young earns the distinction of being the highest ranked non-playoff bowl winner. Texas, Utah and Vanderbilt claim the next three spots. As for the remaining playoff participants, Tulane lands at No. 18 while James Madison finishes at No. 20.

The Big Ten picks up a couple more ranked squads in the final poll as No. 17 Iowa and No. 25 Illinois move into the poll following bowl victories. Arizona and Tennessee fall out.

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In the aftermath of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Nike and LeBron James have found themselves at the center of controversy over an unusual — and what many on social media have called tone deaf — tribute attempt: a shoe in the colorway of the site where Dr. King was assassinated.

The LeBron XXIII ‘Honor the King’ takes inspiration from the teal-colored signage of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where Dr. King was shot and killed on April 4, 1968. The word ‘Equality’ is written on the heel and is one of 23 colorways to be released by Nike commemorating moments throughout James’ 23-year NBA career. This one in particular is meant to pay homage to LeBron’s 51-point performance against the Grizzlies in Memphis on MLK Day in 2008.

But, as Sandra E. Garcia wrote in the New York Times, ‘The assassination represents a painful chapter in the history of the city, one long darkened by a shadow of shame over its role in a national tragedy.’

The Lorraine Motel reopened in 1991 as the National Civil Rights Museum, although Garcia reported that the museum did not know about the sneaker until a few days ago.

LeBron James MLK shoe reactions

The blowback was immediate. Comment sections were flooded with criticism calling Nike out as ‘tasteless’ and ‘shameful,’ with many wondering how the shoe got approved for release in the first place.

‘The fact that this is real indicates, yet again, that not enough black folks are in enough rooms at Nike,’ ESPN pundit Clinton Yates said in a tweet. ‘Or that they don’t feel empowered enough to speak up. What a disgrace.’

‘I usually expect missteps like this from European brands, but I’m actually shocked that nobody at Nike couldn’t see how bad of an idea this was,’ independent sneaker designer Devlin Carter wrote in an Instagram post. ‘Of all the dope stories that could be told or celebrated about MLK, why pick the motel he was assassinated at?’

Many also pointed out the reason why Dr. King was in Memphis in the first place: to support sanitation workers who were striking for better wages and working conditions as part of his Poor People’s Campaign.

‘There are plenty of things about Memphis that could be incorporated with the shoe.’ The Athletic’s Jason Jones wrote in a column. ‘Beale Street, music and barbecue all come to mind that would make for cool details on a shoe.’

‘The last place I would think of would be the signage from where he was assassinated,’ Dennis said. ‘… It just feels like a tone-deaf situation from Nike, from LeBron, from all parties involved.’

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  • The Buffalo Bills fired head coach Sean McDermott despite his consistent winning record and multiple playoff appearances.
  • Ten NFL teams, nearly a third of the league, will have new head coaches next season.
  • Even Super Bowl-winning coaches like John Harbaugh and Mike Tomlin are no longer with their long-time teams.

Apparently, winning in the NFL isn’t enough. Apparently, winning consistently in the NFL isn’t enough. Apparently, winning consistently in the NFL with class isn’t enough.

And here we are.

The Buffalo Bills’ surprisingly unsurprising decision to dump head coach Sean McDermott on Jan. 19, two days after his team’s gutting – and controversial – overtime loss to the Denver Broncos in the divisional round of the playoffs means 10 teams, basically a third of the league, will be turning over what’s typically the most high-profile and high-pressure management post of any professional football operation.

(And maybe it’s just me, but I’d think Payton is in imminent jeopardy here. Not only did he allow McDermott’s Bills to break his quarterback’s ankle, Payton had already been outflanked by the Indianapolis Colts for clear and obvious replacement candidate Philip Rivers. I’d expect 47-year-old Drew Brees to be boarding a plane for Dove Valley at any minute, though who knows if the Broncos have the salary cap room to execute a trade with Fox after Payton mind-numbingly allowed Brees to take one of the network’s open analyst’s job a few months back rather than stash him on the practice squad in the aftermath of the Rivers debacle? But I digress.)

McDermott didn’t get the job done in Buffalo. Most coaches don’t.

Irreverence aside, here are some facts. Every NFL owner wants to win the Super Bowl every year − you don’t get to be a multi-billionaire able to obtain one of these franchises without a competitive streak. But, by that standard, only 3% of them are going to be completely satisfied annually when Valentine’s Day rolls around.

Send flowers and chocolates to a coach like McDermott, who made the playoffs eight times in nine seasons (including five AFC East titles and two berths in the conference championship game) – that after the Bills had missed the playoffs for 17 consecutive seasons prior to his arrival? After he fostered a familial atmosphere around a team that previously hadn’t held much allure for free agents? Nah, he never really got the job done. The team’s statement announcing his firing explicitly signaled someone new was required in order “to give this organization the best opportunity to take our team to the next level.”

McDermott’s ouster comes on the heels of other ringless bums getting whacked. Mike McDaniel, formerly of the Miami Dolphins, and Kevin Stefanski, a two-time Coach of the Year – for the Cleveland Browns – both made multiple postseason trips with organizations that have reeked of dysfunction for the entirety of the 21st century … and longer. Stefanski wasn’t out of work long, scooped up by the Atlanta Falcons over the weekend, and McDaniel doubtless won’t be – whether he gets another head job or becomes one of the league’s top-compensated offensive coordinators.

Let’s move on to John Harbaugh and Mike Tomlin, who spent nearly two decades embroiled as adversaries in one of the league’s great border wars … while becoming pillars in their respective communities. And, while throwing figurative haymakers at one another twice – and sometimes thrice – per season, both of them did get it done, the Pittsburgh Steelers and Baltimore Ravens each earning a Lombardi Trophy during each presumptive Hall of Famer’s tenure.

Wait, pearls clutched – just one Super Bowl win, you ask? Per guy?

Yes, that’s correct. Harbaugh and Tomlin each have one massive ring. Meaning, by the time Super Bowl 60 concludes next month, they’ll account for 8% of those won over the past quarter century, a period in time when Tom Brady, Patrick Mahomes and the Manning brothers have 56% of them. The bling is pretty hard to come by, folks.

Regardless, Harbaugh was shown the door after 18 seasons (three of them sub-.500), 13 years removed from his apex and having blown too many fourth-quarter leads – maybe not a champagne problem, but not one encountered by bad clubs. Tomlin left of his own volition after 19 years, Pittsburgh owner Art Rooney II characterizing it as something of a family matter after he’d planned on having Tomlin back for Year 20. It should also be noted that Rooney expressed his distaste for the term “rebuild” while expressing this philosophy: ‘I think you try every year. Some years you have the horses to really get there. Some years you don’t, but you try every year, in my view.’

You’ll recall Tomlin never had a losing season, perhaps an accomplishment that will never be replicated over the entirety of a 19-year stint. But the consistent winning also precluded the Steelers from getting into position for the young franchise quarterback they so desperately needed to succeed Ben Roethlisberger. Tomlin absorbed tremendous heat for his seven consecutive playoff losses, all coming in decisive fashion. But now you know he didn’t exactly have – nor probably wanted – the luxury of a 2-14 season that might buy you Andrew Luck or whomever atop the draft.

NFL coaching carousel devolving into absurd shell game

See how freaking hard this job is? If you’re good at it, you stick around a while … so you can get lambasted on talk radio … so you can work 100 hours a week … so you can deal with 26-year-olds who might have infinitely more money, organizational influence and far less maturity than you probably do.

And Tomlin was one of the lucky ones. He left on his own terms. He worked for a patient, supportive, (mostly) realistic owner. Tomlin also won out of the chute. If predecessors Chuck Noll and Bill Cowher were hired nowadays, they’d already be begging for defensive coordinator interviews.

At least high-quality coaches like Harbaugh and Stefanski – and, most likely, Tomlin, McDermott and McDaniel, if they so choose – don’t have to look long to find another shot in what’s seemingly devolving into an absurd shell game.

“You can’t say that timing is perfect in anything,” Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti said last week of his agonizing call to relieve Harbaugh, revealing that his former coach wound up consoling him.

“But I got to the point that I didn’t believe that I would feel regret after I made that decision. And that’s what instinct is. When you finally get to the point that you’re pretty damn sure that you are not going to regret the decision a day or a week later, then that’s the time to make the decision. Is that fair?”

Coming from one of the league’s truly great owners? Yes. Despite the seismic nature of the move, Bisciotti afforded Harbaugh the humanity, advice and help to move forward that few of his peers ever reap.

As for most everyone else? Jerry Glanville, who split nine seasons coaching the Falcons and Houston Oilers from 1985 to 1993 couldn’t have been more prophetic when he so perfectly summed up the league writ large while chewing out an official.

‘This isn’t college. You’re not at a homecoming. This is the NFL, which stands for ‘not for long.’”

A statement truer now than it’s ever been.

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President Donald Trump made a special appearance Tuesday at the White House press briefing on the one-year anniversary of his second term’s start.

The president highlighted crime and fraud in Minnesota at the top of his remarks.

Trump was inaugurated one year ago today for his second term as president. The last time he appeared at a White House press briefing was on June 27, 2025.  

‘We have a book that I’m not going to read to you, but these are the accomplishments of what we’ve produced,’ Trump said, holding up a packet of papers. 

‘All page after page after page, individual things. I could stand here and read it for a week, and we wouldn’t be finished. But we’ve done more than any other administration has done by far in terms of military, in terms of ending wars, in terms of completing wars. Nobody’s really seen very much like it.’

The president said, ‘They’re apprehending murderers and drug dealers and a lot of bad people’ in Minnesota.

He then held up photos of suspects in Minnesota who have been taken into custody.

‘Boy, these are rough characters. These are all criminal illegal aliens that, in many cases, they’re murderers. They’re drug lords, drug dealers,’ Trump said. ‘These are just in Minnesota.

‘Minnesota, the crime is incredible, the financial crimes are incredible.’

Prior to the briefing, Leavitt wrote on X, ‘In just one year, President Trump has accomplished more than many presidents do in eight.’

‘We’ve never had a president fight harder to deliver on the promises he made to the American people than President Trump,’ she said, adding, ‘A very special guest will be joining me at the podium today.’

The White House also released a list Tuesday of ‘365 wins’ from the first full year of Trump’s second term.

‘One year ago today, President Donald Trump returned to office with a resounding mandate to restore prosperity, secure the border, rebuild American strength and put the American people first. In just 365 days, President Trump has delivered truly transformative results with the most accomplished first year of any presidential term in modern history,’ it said.

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